Mere weeks before the home video release of the latest entry in the Halloween franchise, an early glimpse of one of the special features is now streaming on YouTube.

From Universal Home Entertainment’s YT channel, the deleted scene features Aaron Korey (Jefferson Hall) and Dana Haines (Rhian Rees), the documentary filmmakers who are researching the masked killer Michael Myers, during a pretty solid faux scare.

Reprising her iconic role from the original 1978 film, Jamie Lee Curtis comes to her final confrontation with Michael Myers, the masked killer who has haunted her since narrowly escaping the night he went on a killing spree forty years prior on Halloween night.

Curtis stars in the 2018 film along with Judy Greer who plays the daughter of Curtis’ character named Karen Strode and Andi Matichak (Orange Is the New Black, Underground) who plays Allyson, Laurie’s granddaughter.

Following only the continuity of the original Halloween, screenwriters David Gordon Green, Jeff Fradley and Danny McBride opted to tell the story free from the canon of the previous mythology. Green also served as director.

Curtis has appeared in four films of the series; the 1978 original, 1981’s Halloween II, 1998’s Halloween H20: 20 Years Later and Halloween Resurrection in 2002.

John Carpenter, director and composer of the original entry, executive produced and served as a creative consultant on the 2018 film, joining forces with Hollywood’s current leading producer of horror, Jason Blum (Get Out, Split, The Purge, Paranormal Activity).

In an interview with Deadline, McBride confirmed that early development on a sequel has begun.

Halloween ’18 will be available to purchase digitally via Movies Anywhere on December 28, then on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand this coming January 15.

Since Mark was four years old he has always loved the horror genre, even when his mother would be a good parent and not let him watch such films. It was when he would sneak into the Horror section at the video store called Tommy K's that he would see all of the VHS covers of classics like Friday the 13th and A Nightmare on Elm Street.

During his time as a journalism major and news staff writer at Southern CT State University, he had the pleasure of meeting and interviewing paranormal investigator Lorraine Warren before a seminar in 2009 at the Lyman Center on campus.